An attorney who represents some members of the family of the suspect jailed in the Opening Day beating of San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow said Tuesday the suspect’s 10-year-old daughter is willing to testify that her father was not at Dodger Stadium that day.

Chip Matthews told KCAL9 that he interviewed the daughter, who told him her father Giovanni Ramirez was with her and other family members all day March 31.

“She is a beautiful, smart young lady and she will happily testify about that,” Matthews said. “The believability that she brings to the table will serve him well.”

Ramirez, 31, of Los Angeles, was arrested at about 7:10 a.m. Sunday in an apartment in the 800 block of North Mariposa Avenue in East Hollywood. He was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon — the foot he used to kick his victim — and held in lieu of $1 million bail.

Charges have not been filed against Ramirez. He will remain in jail on a parole hold, police said today following a meeting between detectives from the Los Angeles Police Department’s Northeast Division and officials of the District Attorney’s Office.

Investigators were preparing police lineups with multiple witnesses to March 31 attack in a Dodger Stadium parking lot on the 42-year-old Stow, who was wearing Giants apparel, the Los Angeles Times reported today.

Lineups ask witnesses to identify or recognize a suspect in person and generally produce stronger evidence compared with a witness choosing a suspect from a series of photographs.

The tip that resulted in the arrest was provided by a parole officer, Los Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck said.

A mug shot of Ramirez from a file kept by parole agents was posted on some news media websites Monday, angering LAPD officials, who thought the photo would compromise the investigation if witnesses saw the picture before the lineups.

Officials contacted news outlets to ask for the removal of the mug shot and requested that no one post the image until the lineups were conducted, The Times reported.

The two other suspects — a man sought for his involvement in the assault and a female thought to have been the getaway driver — remain at large, police said.

Stow remains listed in critical condition in a San Francisco hospital.